Word: demarest
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...York, the principal staff group assigned to the story-Senior Editor Michael Demarest, Writer Ronald Kriss and Researcher Harriet Heck-worked in an isolated, unmarked suite of offices on the 40th floor of the Time & Life Building, while some other non-TIME tenants near by wondered what mysterious strangers were doing there when everyone else on the floor was on the way home for the evening. For Mike Demarest, it was the third Man of the Year project in a row, since he handled the stories on General William Westmoreland (Jan. 7, 1966) and the Twenty-five and Under generation...
...Washington task force's reports moved to New York, where Editor Michael Demarest and Writer Robert Jones (who had been an on-foot reporter in last spring's Peace March) studied them along with information that other correspondents had sent in from across the nation and around the world. Altogether, they produced a troubling story of a many-faceted movement often at odds with itself...
...cover story, written by Laurence Barrett and edited by Michael Demarest, attempts to assess not only the import of the Glassboro gathering but the whole range of foreign-policy problems faced by the U.S. and the Soviet Union. TIME bureaus all over the world contributed to that assessment, but, sometimes, getting the story out of Glassboro proved hardest. Communications were a shambles, and reporters were reduced to queuing up outside a few phone booths in the yard. At one point, Bruce Nelan was trying impatiently to get a call through to New York on the overloaded trunk line...
...entire Saigon staff worked on the cover story, which was written in New York by Robert Jones and edited by Michael Demarest. From our Washington bureau, Harlem-born Wallace Terry, 29, arrived on the scene to help round out the coverage. "This was my first experience reporting a war," recalls Terry, "but not my first experience reporting violence. For nearly seven years I have followed the development of the Negro revolution in all corners of America. Now a Negro airborne sergeant kidded me about being safer in Viet Nam than I was during the Harlem riots (when I was knocked...
...whipped out their form charts, consulted their ample experience of past races, and sent out requests to our correspondents for the most reliable stable in formation. The result is this week's cover story on the Big Event of 1968. Written by Ronald Kriss and edited by Michael Demarest, the story surveys the entire field of likely candidates, professed noncandidates plus a few dark horses, listing their handicaps and assessing their chances...